Use A Lottery Strategy To Get More Winning Lotto Tickets

By Mark Walters

Almost everyone wants to win the lottery, but they don't study how to do achieve it. Before I teach you a proven strategy on how to win the lottery, let me first tell you two systems of thinking that do not work. First of all, some people believe that you should use the numbers in newspapers and magazines that 'psychic' columnists are paid to come up with. This is absolute nonsense! They are just total guesses and, besides, there will also be thousands of other people using exactly the same numbers.

Another method that doesn't work is using the birth dates of family and friends. using this approach is actually reducing your chances of picking a winning set of numbers. Can you guess why? It's because the range for the birthday numbers will only be from 1 to 31. You need to take into account those numbers above 31 because they are drawn just about every week.

So, those are the two methods most people use that do not work in the real world. And now, let me share with you one technique which has been proven to work. A foreword first though, just to validate my credentials in telling you this; I have played the lottery since it first came out, and have tried out various different systems. Not only have I tried them out, I've done statistical analysis on them, and have the winnings to back up what I say.

Additionally, independent studies have reached the same results as my own research. What I use is something called the 'Frequency Theory', which is based around the fact that certain numbers are drawn a lot more often than other numbers. Let me explain what the frequency theory means. It means that you need to play the numbers that have been drawn the most often in the most recent drawings.

Now, this may sound like contradictory to your average way of thinking. Most average lottery players think that they should go with the numbers which haven't drawn for a while, and this may seem to you also to be common sense. However, history has repeatedly shown that this isn't the case, and that once a number starts to be drawn frequently, it will continue to be drawn frequently for a while.

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